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  1. Aristotelous vivliothēkē: hē spoudaioterē syllogē vivliōn pou synkrotēthēke pote.K. Staikos - 2015 - Athēna: Ekdoseis Atōn.
     
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  2.  6
    Diachronika tekmēria tēs Platōnikēs paradosēs: apo ton 4o aiōna p.Ch. heōs ton 16o aiōna m.Ch.K. Staikos - 2014 - Athēna: Atōn.
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  3. Hellēnikes philosophikes ekdoseis ton prōto aiōna tēs typographias: katalogos ekthesēs.K. Staikos & David Hardy - 2001 - Athēna: Eurōpaiko Politistiko Kentro Delphōn. Edited by David A. Hardy.
     
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  4. Hē vivliothēkē tou Platōna kai tēs Akadēmias: historiko, ho rolos tou anagnōstē, to hypostrōma tōn Dialogōn, ekdotikes diadikasies, philosophia tou schediasmou.K. Staikos - 2012 - Athēna: Atōn.
     
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  5.  5
    The library of Aristotle: the most important collection of books ever formed.K. Staikos - 2016 - Athens, Greece: ATON Publications. Edited by Alexandra Doumas.
    The Library of Aristotle follows the adventures of Aristotle's book collection down to the edition of the corpus aristotelicum by Andronicus of Rhodes in the first century CE. Aristotle started to collect books in order to form his personal library even before he became a member of the Academy and a pupil of Plato (367 BCE). The kernel of his collection consisted in the texts of his father Nicomachus and medical treatises which the latter, who was physician to Amyntas III (...)
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    Testimonies of the Platonic tradition: 4th century BC-16th century AD.K. Staikos - 2015 - Athens, Greece: ATON Publications. Edited by Alexandra Doumas.
    Testimonies of Platonic Tradition' is, in a way, a continuation of Konstantinos Staikos's recent publication 'Books and Ideas: The Library of Plato and the Academy' (2013). It deals with questions of transmission and classification of Plato's Dialogues from the philosopher's own age down to the 16th century, that is, with the fate of the Platonic corpus. As the chronicle of this journey unfolds, readers will be able to follow the foundation of philosophical schools whose teaching was based on Platonic theories (...)
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